Kim Brunhuber is a CBC News Senior Reporter based in Los Angeles. He has travelled the world from Sierra Leone to Afghanistan as a videojournalist, shooting and editing pieces for TV, radio and online. Originally from Montreal, he speaks French and Spanish, and is also a published novelist.

Water is precious in the drought-plagued region, and this massive water recycling plant in Fountain Valley, an hour south of Los Angeles, was built to convert raw sewage into drinkable H20.

The brown liquid begins to bubble. Then it will be drawn into straw-like filters 1/300th the size of a human hair.

"That will keep all of the bacteria and viruses out," Bilodeau says.

This Fountain Valley, Calif., recycling plant can generate more than 100,000 gallons of pure water a day. (Kim Brunhuber)

The sewage will go through reverse osmosis and then be treated with intense UV light from bulbs manufactured by Ontario company Trojan UV.

"
It's actually clean down to the atomic level, where all we have left is the H20 molecules," Bilodeau says. "And now this plant produces enough water to serve 800,000 people."

Got any more sewage?

According to the Orange County Water District, the facility is the largest of its kind in the world. Built in 2008, it has already gone through one expansion, and now Bilodeau says they're preparing for a second.

"Our only limiting factor now is that we need more sewage water to process," Bilodeau says. "Here in Orange County we actually have less sewage than we did 20 years ago because of all of the water conservation that takes place with low-flow toilets and low-flow shower heads."

Pure water derived from sewage. The reporter verifies it tastes like bottled water but a little more flat due to the lack of minerals. (Kim Brunhuber)

Urban Californians are using a third less water than they were two years ago. But letting lawns go brown and fountains go dry isn't enough. Many here realize that at home they have to not just use less, but re-use more.

That's why Laura Allen decided to modified some of her appliances. Half of California's urban water is used on landscaping. But the garden at her apartment building gets most of its water from its sinks and washing machines.

As she washes her hands, the dirty water is piped from the sink into small underground reservoirs covered with small round covers. Water trickles out of the pipe and into the reservoir through a layer of wood shavings.

"The greywater flows through, it soaks through the wood chips. And they are actually the filter, so they catch all the lint or debris in the water, and the greywater soaks down into the soil," Allen says.

Greywater Action co-founder Laura Allen demonstrates a washing machine equipped with a valve that redirects waste water to the apartment's garden. (Kim Brunhuber)

The washing machine, too, has been retrofitted with a simple valve.

"One side of the valve sends the water back to the sewer or the septic, the other side goes into our irrigation system," Allen says. "You have to make sure you're using plant-friendly products… if you use that, the water's great quality for irrigation."

As founder of the group Greywater Action, she now teaches people how to install their own water recycling systems, which are becoming more popular as Californians become more aware of the drought and receive generous incentives from water utilities.

"Generally speaking, you can save 16 to 40 per cent of your water consumption," Allen says.

That's about 56,780 litres a year for an average household. Which is helpful, but some cities are starting to think a lot bigger.

This week, the the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California presented a plan to develop a water recycling plant in the Los Angeles area that could provide enough water for 300,000 people for a year. It would be even bigger than the mega-plant in Orange County, which generates enough to cover a quarter of the needs of the district's more than two million residents.

Orange County Water District vice-president Denis Bilodeau gives a tour of the massive sewage recycling plant in Fountain Valley, Calif. (Kim Brunhuber)

"Once we explain to people that the water we create here is actually cleaner than bottled water or what's in their tap," Bilodeau says, "then they understand that this water is very safe to drink."

Except no-one will actually drink this water — at least not right away.

Regardless of how much the water is filtered, health officials here still don't allow it to go directly from toilet-to-tap.

"We're very mindful that perhaps the public isn't quite ready for that step yet," Bilodeau says.

Instead, it'll be piped underground to replenish California's dwindling groundwater, which may eventually get drawn back into the municipal water supply.

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